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Google outlines plans to help you sort real images from fake
  • Is this system trust based, just hoping that all software start tagging images with AI tags? Can't those tags just be removed then, if you want something to not be tagged as AI?

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    It'll be magical
  • And netflix are gonna make a series about ya

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    As a non-techie, where/how can I find out if software is safe?
  • Also, check the number of contributors to a project. All of those people do (probably) trust the project and have also (probably) read at least parts of the source code for it

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    Posting the shopping cart theory because people had questions in a separate thread
  • It's the opposite here in Sweden, in some larger supermarkets you did need a coin but in no smaller shops

    Anyways that's all gone now since no one carries coins anymore

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    Big af but sideways
  • John dillerman (a Danish TV show for kids, look it up)

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    I’m in on because make the global for crypto I want to biggest impact good
  • What's up with the message to start with? How is he making the world better by investing in crypto

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    Seconds
  • Can I get a conversation table?

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    Reading habits in Europe
  • That's true but (at least here in Sweden and among my friends and classmates) I think most people read at least occasionally. Personally, however I'm in the +10 category by a long shot

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    United States fast food chains in Europe
  • I doubt the accuracy of this map. I have never seen a dominos in Sweden and I've seen a few dunkin donuts so the map is, at least not fully accurate. Also didn't McDonald's shut down in Russia?

    Could you please post a source for this map?

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    An informative martial arts infographic
  • Don't you guys not Kung fu fight on boats in the ocean??? I thought everyone did that!

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    Mom can we have linux?
  • What in the whole dam world is linex forte stabilni slozeni 2?

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    [Edited]Do you noticed when someone write or work with the left hand?
  • That's extremely noticeable with left handed people trying to draw on whiteboards

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    Do you know alternative scripts for your language? If so, can you talk about them?
  • I don't know, but I would've think so. Part of the reason is that almost no one actually learns to read this stuff fluently without using the key and going letter by letter. So getting any significant sample of people to test it on would probably be hard

    I can't read (or write) it without the key, however I'm quite fast if I get to do it. I have thought of trying to learn it completely, mainly to see how hard it would be and what I'd learn (apart from, you know, learning brädgårdschiffer) from learning a "new" alfabet. I'd be interested to see how I view it in comparison to regular Latin script. I speak somewhere between 2 and 4 languages depending on how you count and I've found every new one interesting and insightful to learn so it would be fun to see if learning to read a new script fluently would be anywhere near as insightful. Ultimately I'd like to learn Korean or Chinese but that be a major challenge and take a lot of time (also, I could probably not squeeze it in to my formal education with the path I'm going to take so I'd have to do it in my free time)

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    Do you know alternative scripts for your language? If so, can you talk about them?
  • Yeah, sure you can just substitute out the letters or write them out as is. And thanks for the image, i always get problems with images proxyed through ddg and then my instance

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    Do you know alternative scripts for your language? If so, can you talk about them?
  • Does one two one representations of the Latin alfabet count? In such case I'd mention a cipher used in Sweden called "brädgårdschiffer". Here is "hej på dig!" written using brädgårdschiffer with my very sloppy writing on my phone:

    Hej på dig!

    It's decrypted by matching up the shape and amount of dots with the letters in the key below. You look at the edges around the letters and the dots above that square.

    key for brädgårdschiffer. This image is broken (: Link

    I do however think that this chiffer probably exists outside of Sweden under some other name and other letters included (note that W and Q aren't included in the key. They aren't really used for in Swedish, apart from loans from other languages)

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    Anon gets a hug
  • Whilst of course unlikely it might be possible if you accept that the women is around 34 year's old. Then she gave birth to her daughter at 15 and that's not common but also not impossible (I've meet a kid to a mother who's fifteen years older then her kid)

    But in the end this is probably just made up, so what gives?

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    Driver roasted darker than a Vietnamese robusta
  • Lego figures would love this

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    Hmmm
  • Could you explain it then?

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    Hmmm
  • Only the transformations one is correct. All the other ones seemingly also preform a translation, and even if they might be correct if you take the orgin to be slightly outside of the shape but that's bad for educational purposes. Also this one makes the translation transformation look like the identity transformation.

    This last one might just be me, but shouldn't shearing be included here?

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    Opinions on Snapchat
  • I'm 15 years old and live in Europe. Almost all of my friends (and the stranger next to me on the train) use Snapchat. Personally I find it very annoying as my experience mainly consist of getting spammed with meaningless, completely irrelevant and utterly boring selfies by anyone I happen to add. And then, just to make things worse people find it inpolite not to answer with another selfie. And then it's the chats that kinda work but the UI looks clutterd and half baked. Also messages disappear after a while which is utterly annoying.

    At least it would be kinda easy to find people on Snapchat (there's no reason to ask around for someone's number) if it wasn't for the fact that people use the most random pseudonyms imaginable so it's a pain just to know who is who, and almost impossible to pin down new people.

    Also I don't give it location sharing permission, that shit is creepy as fuck, I don't want everyone that I kind of vaguely know to know where I am all the time

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  • We have basic words for the numbers zero to three, so why not use them to count?

    • None (0)
    • Single (1)
    • pair (2)
    • Multiple (3+ but we'll use it as three)

    So with those "digits" we can construct some numbers:

    1. Single
    2. pair
    3. Multiple
    4. Single nothing
    5. Single single
    6. Single pair
    7. Single multiple
    8. Pair of nothing
    9. Pair of singels
    10. Pair of pairs

    And of course we can construct bigger numbers like: 42 = 4²×2+4¹×2+4⁰×2 = pair of pairs of pairs 128 = 4³×2 = pair of absolute complete nothinges For this last one I just use some adjectives to repeat the "nothing" as it looks really weird with multiple nothing in a row.

    > The distance between Stockholm and Gothenburg is a single multiple of none multiple multiples

    > Could I have a single multiple of bananas please?

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    I saw this on the street today and found it very funny

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    And do believe that I, this random guy on the internet has a soul

    I personally don't believe that I anyone else has a soul. From my standup I don't se any reason to believe that our consciousness and our so called "soul" would be any more then something our brain is making up.

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    Like just commenting a friendly joke, a compliment or something like that

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    This is revolutionising!!! This is the first time scientists have managed to separate out a single atom, encapsulated in a vacuum. This will allow amazing new technologies like, ehm small stuf mabey? This is Amazing!

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    I saw the opposite question asked here and thought it would be interesting to flip it on its head.

    I can start. Linux can make arbitrary files executebel and windows (at the time I used it) could definitely not do that. ```sh printf "# /bin/bash\necho 'Hello world'" > HW.bash chmod +x ./HW.bash ./HW.bash

    prints hello world

    ``` ^ something like that is just not possible on windows

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    https:// feddit.nu /post/1538797

    I've seen .: used two times now, and I really wonder what is? The first time I saw it was in an extract from the Swedish dictionary SAOL in NE. They used it something like this so: > History.: since year x

    More lately I saw it used in this comment by @nodsocket@lemmy.world like so: > What make bikes so expensive? > >R.: The willing of people to buy them.

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    What is this? Were does it come from? Should I use it?

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    Edit: thanks for all the answers :). It turns out it was actually used for abbreviation in the dictionary, they wrote "hist." instead of "historia".

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    When I click on the link button in boost it creates an link using the markdown image syntax, aka ![name](URL). An proper markdown link is formatted using [name](URL)

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